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The generated content will be inserted between the START and END markers.  Both markers must exist
in the page.  Any existing content between the markers will be <b>replaced</b>.
<p />
Example:<ul>
<li>Start Token = "{jenkins-between:start|token=replaced-section}"</li>
<li>End Token = "{jenkins-between:end|token=replaced-section}"</li>
<li>Generated text = "2011-06-19"</li>
<li>Existing content:<blockquote><pre>Lorem ipsum
{jenkins-between:start|token=replaced-section}
previous content
{jenkins-between:end|token=replaced-section}
Ipsum lorem</pre></blockquote></li>
<li>New content:<blockquote><pre>Lorem ipsum
{jenkins-between:start|token=replaced-section}
2011-06-19
{jenkins-between:end|token=replaced-section}
Ipsum lorem</pre></blockquote></li>
</ul>
<p />
If you have administrative access to your Confluence installation, consider creating a custom user
macro:
<ul>
  <li>Name: jenkins-between</li>
  <li>[X] Macro has a body</li>
  <li>"Use unprocessed macro body"</li>
  <li>"Macro generates wiki markup"</li>
  <li>Template: <i>**blank**</i></li>
</ul>
This will create a new macro ("{jenkins-between}"), which you can use to mark the start/end
tokens.  Using the Confluence macro tag parameter capability, you can use this single tag
configuration for several "Between start/end token" edits, and simply make each individual editor
configuration use a unique parameter (also remember to make the start/end tags unique as well).
<p />
This token configuration maintains the Wiki rendering aspect of the replacement text, and the
token does not render in the formatted wiki output.
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